Sky completed their IPv6 rollout – any device that comes with IPv6 support will use it by default.

Yesterday we attended the annual IPv6 Council to exchange knowledge and ideas with the rest of the UK networking industry about bringing forward the IPv6 rollout.

For the uninitiated, everything connected to the internet needs an address. With IPv4 there are only 4 billion addresses available which isn’t enough for one per person – let alone one each for my phone, my tablet, my laptop and my new internet connected toaster. So IPv6 is the new network standard that has an effectively unlimited number of addresses and will support an unlimited number of devices. The hard part is persuading everyone to move onto the new network.

Two years ago when the IPv6 Council first met, roughly 1 in 400 internet connections in the UK had IPv6 support. Since then Sky have rolled out IPv6 everywhere and by default all their customers have IPv6 connectivity. BT have rolled IPv6 out to all their SmartHub customers and will be enabling IPv6 for their Homehub 5 and Homehub 4 customers in the near future. Today 1 in 6 UK devices has IPv6 connectivity and when BT complete it’ll be closer to 1 in 3. Imperial College also spoke about their network which has IPv6 enabled everywhere.

Major content sources (Google, Facebook, LinkedIn) and CDNs (Akamai, Cloudflare) are all already enabled with IPv6. This means that as soon as you turn on IPv6 on an access network, over half your traffic flows over IPv6 connections. With Amazon and Microsoft enabling IPv6 in stages on their public clouds by default traffic will continue to grow. Already for a some number of ISPs, IPv6 is the dominant protocol. The Internet Society are already predicting that IPv6 traffic will exceed IPv4 traffic around two to three years from now.

LinkedIn and Microsoft both spoke about deploying IPv6 in their corporate and data centre environments. Both companies are suffering exhaustion of private RFC1918 address space – there just aren’t enough 10.a.b.c addresses to cope with organisations of their scale so they’re moving now to IPv6-only networks.

Back in 2012 we designed and deployed an IPv6-only architecture for Raspberry Pi, and have since designed other IPv6-only infrastructures including a substantial Linux container deployment. Educating the next generation of developers about how networks will work when they join the workforce is critically important.